Tag Archives: West Bank

New female mayor gears Bethlehem up for Christmas

Bethlehem’s first female mayor, Vera Baboun, can’t walk through the main square of the biblical town without being stopped by admirers.

“This is our new mayor, who is turning Bethlehem into one of the greatest cities in the world,” a tour guide hollered to a group of Christian tourists passing by the Church of the Nativity, built over the grotto where tradition says Jesus was born.

Starting with Christmas celebrations — the high point of the year in the town — Baboun is hoping to turn things around in the troubled city. For the past seven years, the Islamic Hamas militant group had a strong presence in Bethlehem’s leadership, prompting a cutoff of international aid funds. But they lost their seats in October elections that brought in Baboun, who is Christian, as Bethlehem’s mayors traditionally are.

The local economy is battered, with the highest unemployment in the West Bank, and local Christians continue to leave Bethlehem, which years ago moved from a Christian majority to a Muslim one. But Baboun is trying to raise hope, pointing to the Palestinans’ recent boost of status at the United Nations.

“We still have a long way to go, but the Christmas season is special this year because not only do we celebrate the birth of Christ, but we are celebrating the birth of the Palestinian state,” Baboun said, standing next to a 17-meter (55-foot) Christmas tree. “It is a Christmas of peace, of hope and love.”

The United Nations General Assembly’s vote last month to upgrade the Palestinians’ status to that of a nonmember observer state set off celebrations across the West Bank.

The move changed little on the ground, with Israel opposing the U.N. recognition bid and saying it bypassed peace negotiations aimed at establishing a state.

Bethlehem, like the rest of the West Bank, fell onto hard times after the violent Palestinian uprising against Israel broke out in late 2000, frightening tourists and pilgrims away. As the fighting has subsided in recent years, the tourists have returned in larger numbers. Last year’s Christmas Eve celebration produced the highest turnout in more than a decade, with some 100,000 visitors, including foreigners and Arab Christians from Israel, reaching Bethlehem.

The Israeli Tourism Ministry said it expects 75,000 tourists to arrive for Christmas this year, citing last month’s clash between Israel and Palestinian militants in Gaza as a reason for the drop. It said there was a 12 percent decrease overall in incoming tourism to Israel last month. Foreign tourists heading to Bethlehem must pass through Israel or the Israel-controlled border crossing from Jordan.

Bethlehem officials say all 34 hotels in the town are fully booked for the Christmas season, including 13 new ones built this year.

About 22,000 Palestinians live in Bethlehem, according to the town council.

Israel turned control of Bethlehem over to the Palestinian Authority a few days before Christmas in 1995, and since then it has become an independence celebration for local Palestinians, as well as a religious holiday for Christians. The square is filled with a mix of tourists, pilgrims and young Palestinians, making it hard to determine how many tourists are there.

The Christmas season is the mainstay of Bethlehem’s economy. When tourism lags because of politics or violence, the town lurches into depression.

Baboun hopes to revitalize her town’s depressed economy through tourism. She said Bethlehem has the highest unemployment rate in the West Bank, at around 20 percent. U.N. figures say unemployment in the West Bank is 17 percent, a figure that may well under-represent the economic crisis, given the large numbers of underemployed in the West Bank.

She is also looking for a return of international aid to the town after Hamas dropped out of the municipal council. The Islamist group won nearly half the seats on the council in 2006 — the last time municipal elections were held. That sparked a halt in aid programs by the European Union, United States and others because they consider the group a terror organization. However, Hamas, which rules the Gaza Strip, boycotted October’s municipal elections, and now the council is held by leftists, independents and the moderate Fatah faction.

Baboun says her status as the town’s first woman mayor can be a draw. “That people voted for me, even many men, is a sign Palestinians want change,” she said.

“I think she is a remarkable woman and a remarkable person,” said Nabil Shaath, an aide to Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. “I’m sure she will excel.”

Many residents remain skeptical.

Ayesh Salahat, a young Palestinian, appeared unimpressed by the Christmas decorations of Manger Square and the elaborate fireworks that coincided with last week’s lighting of the tree. Even as he watched dozens of tourists from all over the world taking pictures in the square, he said he doubted things would get better.

“I don’t think we’ll see any improvement in unemployment or services in Bethlehem,” he said. “I’m not hopeful life will ever change here.”

Outside the town’s quaint Manger Square, Bethlehem is a drab, sprawling town with a dwindling Christian base.

Overall, there are only about 50,000 Christians in the West Bank, less than 3 percent of the population, the result of a lower birthrate and increased emigration. Bethlehem’s Christians make up only a third of the town’s residents, down from 75 percent a few decades ago.

Located on the southeastern outskirts of Jerusalem, Bethlehem is surrounded on three sides by a barrier Israel built to stop Palestinian militants after a wave of suicide bomb attacks in the last decade. Palestinians say the barrier has damaged their economy by restricting movement in and out of town.

“Our city is literally surrounded by settlements and walls,” she said, pointing to the nearby barrier, where locals have painted a Christmas tree enclosed by gates. “It harms our growth, there’s no exchange of people, ideas, goods.”

Despite the hardships, Baboun said she is hopeful ahead of the holiday season, in large part due to the successful U.N. bid.

“This Christmas will be one of thanks, a message of peace for our statehood,” she said, “but also a reminder that our fight is not over.”

Source: Fox World News

AP Exclusive: Palestinians aim to isolate Israel

Weeks ahead of Israeli elections, Palestinian officials are already plotting a series of tough steps against Israel to be taken if, as polls predict, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is re-elected and peace efforts remain stalled.

Emboldened by their newly upgraded status at the United Nations, the Palestinians are talking of filing war crimes charges against Israel, staging mass demonstrations in the West Bank, encouraging the international community to impose sanctions, and ending the security cooperation that has helped preserve quiet in recent years.

These plans, combined with growing international impatience with Israeli settlement construction on occupied land, could spell trouble and international isolation for the Israeli leader.

In a series of interviews with The Associated Press, a number of Palestinian officials all voiced a similar theme: Following the U.N. General Assembly‘s recognition of “Palestine” as a nonmember observer state in November, the status quo cannot continue.

“2013 will see a new Palestinian political track. There will be new rules in our relationship with Israel and the world,” said Hussam Zumlot, an aide to President Mahmoud Abbas.

Israeli-Palestinian peace talks broke down shortly before Netanyahu’s election in early 2009 and have remained frozen throughout his term, mostly due to the dispute over Israel‘s construction of settlements in east Jerusalem and the West Bank. The Palestinians claim the areas, along with the Gaza Strip, for a future state. Israel captured the areas in the 1967 Mideast war.

The Palestinians have demanded that Israel halt settlement construction before negotiations can resume, saying the continued building is a show of bad faith. Netanyahu says talks should resume without preconditions, and notes that a 10-month partial freeze on construction he imposed two years ago failed to bring about substantive negotiations.

Frustrated with the impasse, the Palestinians turned to the United Nations for recognition of an independent state in the West Bank, east Jerusalem and Gaza. Israel, which withdrew from Gaza in 2005, rejects a return to its 1967 lines.

Although the U.N. vote did not change the situation on the ground, it had deep implications. Opposed by just nine countries, it amounted to a strong international endorsement of the Palestinian position on future borders. It also cleared the way for them to join international agencies to press their grievances against Israel.

Netanyahu has accused the Palestinians of bypassing direct negotiations.

“One would hope we will in fact see in 2013 the re-emergence of the Israeli-Palestinian negotiating process,” said Netanyahu’s spokesman, Mark Regev. “There is no substitute for direct talks. You’re not going to make peace in resolutions at the United Nations or other international forums.”

At the heart of the deadlock are the huge gaps between the two sides’ conditions. Netanyahu has embraced the idea of establishing a Palestinian state alongside Israel. Without action soon, the thinking goes, Israel will find itself in permanent control of millions of disenfranchised Palestinians, threatening its status as a democracy with a Jewish majority. But Netanyahu has added so many caveats, including a refusal to turn Jerusalem into a shared capital and demands to retain significant parts of the West Bank, that the Palestinians believe negotiations would be futile.

Palestinian officials say they are hopeful that a formula for restarting talks can be found after Israel‘s election on Jan. 22, perhaps through a new initiative from President Barack Obama.

The Palestinians have begun to speak of a trial, six-month negotiating period. Azzam al-Ahmed, a top aide to Abbas, said Arab diplomats will present the plan in Western capitals, Russia and China next month. But with the Palestinians insistent on a settlement freeze, and opinion polls forecasting a new hardline Israeli coalition headed by Netanyahu, expectations are low.

The Palestinian officials said they will not rush toward any punitive measure, but they are determined not to stand pat.

“We have to prepare ourselves for a long and tough battle,” added Yasser Abed Rabbo, secretary-general of the Palestine Liberation Organization, the Palestinians’ top decision making body. “We will use all the political tools available.”

Among the options being considered is halting cooperation between Israeli and Palestinian security forces in the West Bank. The cooperation is widely seen as a key element in preserving the calm in the West Bank in recent years, in sharp contrast to the heavy fighting a decade ago.

“There will be no security cooperation as long as there is no political horizon,” said Mohammed Ishtayeh, a Palestinian Cabinet minister.

The Palestinians also talk of increasing “popular struggle,” the term they use for demonstrations against Israeli soldiers. Such face-to-face confrontations frequently turn tense, with protesters throwing stones and troops firing tear gas and water cannons, and run the risk of growing more violent.

Perhaps most troubling to Israel, the Palestinians also want to use their upgraded status on the world stage to push for international action against Israel.

Officials say they will move to join the International Criminal Court, where they hope to pursue war crimes charges against Israel for its settlement activities. Although the road to taking legal action in the ICC appears to be long and complicated, it nonetheless has made Israeli officials jittery.

“We are going to pursue this policy to reach a point of having the international community impose sanctions on Israel,” said Qais Abdelkareem, another PLO official.

This Palestinian agenda, while ambitious, is likely to encounter stiff resistance from both Israel and its international allies. Israel has a number of tools at its disposal, including possible military or economic pressure on the Palestinians. Israel‘s allies in the West, particularly the U.S., will also likely shield it from any attempt to impose broad international sanctions, at least in the near term.

But there are signs that international patience with Israel is wearing thin. There was strikingly sharp anger over the Israeli plan to build thousands of new settler homes in response to the Palestinian bid at the U.N.

The U.S., using especially harsh language, accused Israel of engaging in a “pattern of provocative action.” All the members of the U.N. Security Council except the U.S. denounced the Israeli settlement plans at a special meeting this week.

The European Union has also condemned the planned construction. The 27-member bloc issued a statement earlier this month raising the possibility of requiring Israel to label any exports that originate in the settlements. It also noted that future cooperation agreements would not include territories captured in 1967, including east Jerusalem, which Israel claims as an integral part of its capital. There are fears that individual European states might impose sanctions of their own.

An Israeli official said the extent of the international uproar had caught officials off guard. “Something has changed,” he said. “Clearly a line has been crossed.” He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was discussing closed diplomatic meetings.

Yossi Beilin, a former deputy foreign minister and peace negotiator, said there is “no way” the status quo can continue and that Netanyahu “understands that this situation where the U.S. is the only one to support Israel cannot go on forever.” He said Netanyahu, after pandering to hard-liners during the election campaign, will likely try to bring in a centrist party into his coalition after the vote to give the government an image of moderation.

“Reality might impose itself in such a way that we will find him doing things, like maybe an interim agreement with the Palestinians or something that seems now unexpected,” Beilin said. “He will make small steps to appease adversaries. And to Netanyahu, the whole world is an adversary.”

Source: Fox World News

Israel moves forward with new east Jerusalem settlement

A Jerusalem official says Israel is moving ahead with construction of a new east Jerusalem settlement, despite an international outcry over continued building.

City Councilman Pepe Alalu says a municipal committee on Wednesday approved building 2,612 housing units in Givat Hamatos, the first new east Jerusalem settlement to be built since 1997. Construction could begin in a year.

Israel has announced several new building projects since the U.N. voted for a Palestinian state last month. Critics consider Givat Hamatos particularly problematic because, along with another contentious building plan, it would hinder access to east Jerusalem from the West Bank. The Palestinians claim east Jerusalem as the capital of their future state.

The U.S. has harshly criticized the construction plans. The U.N. Security Council is expected to discuss it Wednesday.

Source: Fox World News

Israel approves new east Jerusalem settlement

A Jerusalem official says Israel is moving ahead with construction of a new east Jerusalem settlement, despite an international outcry over continued building.

City Councilman Pepe Alalu says a municipal committee on Wednesday approved building 2,612 housing units in Givat Hamatos, the first new east Jerusalem settlement to be built since 1997. Construction could begin in a year.

Israel has announced several new building projects since the U.N. voted for a Palestinian state last month. Critics consider Givat Hamatos particularly problematic because, along with another contentious building plan, it would hinder access to east Jerusalem from the West Bank. The Palestinians claim east Jerusalem as the capital of their future state.

The U.S. has harshly criticized the construction plans. The U.N. Security Council is expected to discuss it Wednesday.

Source: Fox World News

Israeli Arabs unenthusiastic about Jan. 22 vote

Israeli Arab activist Rasool Saada is crisscrossing the country to encourage fellow Arab citizens to vote in Jan. 22 parliamentary elections, convinced they can make a difference. Numerically, he’s right. Historically, it hasn’t worked out that way.

Arabs make up about a fifth of Israel‘s population, but their voter turnout has been much lower than that of the Jewish majority. Many Arabs are disillusioned with politics, feeling alienated as a minority in a Jewish state and dissatisfied with their own squabbling, ineffective representatives.

On the Jewish side, suspicion over the loyalty and ultimate goals of Israeli Arabs, always in the background, has grown in recent years with the deadlock in Israeli-Palestinian peacemaking and more overt identification with the Palestinians by Israeli Arab leaders.

“It’s a daily identity crisis living as an Arab in Israel, because your Palestinian identity is your core,” said Saada, 23, the only Arab in his law school class at Israel‘s Bar-Ilan University. “Many throw their hands up and don’t want to participate in politics, but because we’re a minority, we need to have our voices heard.”

Israeli Arabs hold citizenship rights that, in contrast to their Palestinian brethren in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, give them access to Israeli social services and the right to vote. They tend to be poorer and less educated than Israeli Jews and often suffer discrimination in the job and housing markets.

“We’re second-class citizens, and Israeli politicians will only talk to us behind closed doors,” said Bashaer Fahoum-Jayoussi, a lawyer in Nazareth, the largest Arab city in Israel. “For us, integration isn’t an option, it’s mandatory. We speak Hebrew, we live with Israeli flags everywhere. But on the other end, they never extend a hand,” she said.

The disillusionment works both ways.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s main coalition partner, Yisrael Beitenu, made a strong showing in 2009 elections with a message that questioned the loyalty of Israeli Arabs.

In 2010, Arab lawmaker Hanin Zoabi, whose campaign posters are plastered all over Nazareth, infuriated many Israelis when she joined pro-Palestinian activists on an international flotilla that tried to break through Israel‘s naval blockade of the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip. Israel considered the flotilla a dangerous propaganda exercise. Zoabi was nearly assaulted in parliament and subsequently stripped of some parliamentary privileges.

In 2010, Amir Makhoul, a leading community activist, pleaded guilty to handing sensitive information to the Lebanese guerrilla group Hezbollah. He was sentenced to nine years in prison. Another lawmaker, Azmi Bishara, fled the country five years ago to avoid facing espionage charges.

Four years of deadlock in Mideast peace efforts and last month’s conflict with Palestinian militants in Gaza have added to mutual mistrust.

Jamal Zahalka, an Arab lawmaker who has served in parliament since 2003, said the atmosphere there has grown considerably more hostile.

“We’re trying to encourage Arabs to vote because it’s important, but you can’t blame them when they see how little power we have in parliament,” he said. “Not only do (Jewish lawmakers) refuse to hear us, but they also want to ban us from running.” A motion to ban the Arab parties is on the table again, as it is before every election, and it is likely to be rejected as in the past.

In this combustible atmosphere, many Israeli Arabs are expected to stay home on election day. A recent survey by the Abraham Fund Initiatives, an advocacy group that promotes coexistence, found that about half of Israeli Arab voters are expected to cast ballots, compared to about 70 percent of Jewish voters.

A study released this week illustrated the gaps that Arabs have long complained about. The College of Management Academic Studies found that native-born Israeli Jews earn 41 percent higher wages than their Arab counterparts in high-paying professions. The gap widens to a 64 percent difference after 10 years in the workplace.

Many Arabs are also frustrated by infighting among Arab politicians.

In theory, the Arab population could deliver enough seats in the 120-member parliament to influence the makeup of a coalition government. But Arab parties have been divided by ideological differences and personal rivalries, leaving them on the margins of Israeli politics. In the outgoing parliament, Arab parties held just 11 of the 120 seats.

Hoping to reverse this trend, a Bedouin Arab politician, Atef Krinawi, has founded what he calls the first “pro-Israel” Arab political party.

Krinawi says too many Arab politicians focus on the conflict with the Palestinians to the detriment of domestic issues like poverty and crime. He also believes Arabs should serve in in the Israeli military, a recommendation that most Arabs reject.

Although many surveys indicate that civic issues eclipse the Palestinian issue as main concerns among Arabs, Krinawi’s party isn’t finding much traction.

“If you want to change the system, yes, you must learn to play the game from within,” said Jasmine Abusif, a student at the College of Management Academic Studies. “But you can’t separate the Palestinian issue. You’re tied to it and you’re stuck in the middle.”

The conflict between Israel‘s Jews and Arabs goes back to the country’s establishment in 1948. At the time, hundreds of thousands of Arabs either fled or were driven out of the country, leaving properties and relatives behind. For the first 18 years of Israel‘s existence, Arabs lived under martial law that included curfews and travel permits.

Many Arab Israelis mark 2000, when police killed 13 Israeli Arabs during riots that broke out following the eruption of a Palestinian uprising in the West Bank and Gaza, as a turning point. Many say the state failed to properly investigate the riot and take action against the police officers responsible.

“After that, we really started questioning how exactly we fit into this state,” said Marie Totry, a professor at Tel Aviv University.

Source: Fox World News

Israeli leader vows more east Jerusalem settlement

Israel‘s prime minister has rejected international criticism of plans to build thousands of settlement homes in east Jerusalem, insisting construction will move forward.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Tuesday that “Jerusalem is the eternal capital of the state of Israel, and we will continue to build there.” He said Israelis overwhelmingly believed in “united Jerusalem,” referring to Jewish west Jerusalem and east Jerusalem, annexed by Israel but claimed by the Palestinians.

Netanyahu has come under heavy international criticism since announcing plans to build thousands of homes in east Jerusalem and the West Bank in response to last month’s decision by the U.N. to upgrade the Palestinians’ observer status. The Palestinians claim both areas.

On Monday, a plan to build 1,500 homes in east Jerusalem cleared an intermediate stage of planning.

Source: Fox World News

4 European Union nations to condemn latest Israel settlement plans

A European diplomat says Germany and three other European members of the U.N. Security Council are preparing a statement condemning Israel‘s latest settlement plans in east Jerusalem and the West Bank.

The so-called E4 grouping — Britain, France, Germany and Portugal — has expressed concerns that such activities could threaten the possible two-state solution between Israel and the Palestinians.

The diplomat said the details of the joint statement are being finalized. He spoke Tuesday on condition of anonymity because the work was not yet completed.

On Monday, Israel said it was pushing forward with plans to build 1,500 apartments in east Jerusalem — the Palestinians’ hoped-for capital.

Israel captured east Jerusalem in the 1967 Mideast war and annexed the area in a move that is not internationally recognized.

Source: Fox World News

4 EU nations to condemn latest Israel settlements

A European diplomat says Germany and three other European members of the U.N. Security Council are preparing a statement condemning Israel‘s latest settlement plans in east Jerusalem and the West Bank.

The so-called E4 grouping — Britain, France, Germany and Portugal — has expressed concerns that such activities could threaten the possible two-state solution between Israel and the Palestinians.

The diplomat said the details of the joint statement are being finalized. He spoke Tuesday on condition of anonymity because the work was not yet completed.

On Monday, Israel said it was pushing forward with plans to build 1,500 apartments in east Jerusalem — the Palestinians’ hoped-for capital.

Israel captured east Jerusalem in the 1967 Mideast war and annexed the area in a move that is not internationally recognized.

Source: Fox World News

Israel pushes forward with east Jerusalem building plan

Israel on Monday said it was pushing forward with plans to build hundreds of homes in a Jewish settlement of east Jerusalem, risking renewed tensions with the Palestinians and its Western allies over the contentious project.

The announcement was part of a new Israeli settlement push announced earlier this month as retaliation for the Palestinians’ success in winning U.N. recognition for a state at the United Nations. Israel was widely criticized internationally for the settlement plans, though actual construction would be far in the future.

An Interior Ministry committee on Monday approved an intermediate stage of planning for the construction of 1,500 apartments in the Ramat Shlomo neighborhood, a part of the city Palestinians claim for a future capital. The plan had been in the pipeline since it was first announced in 2010 during a visit to Israel by Vice President Joe Biden, causing a major diplomatic rift with Washington that took months to mend.

Ministry spokeswoman Efrat Orbach said the project still must go through several additional planning stages, and it could be years before final approval and construction.

Nabil Abu Rdeneh, a spokesman for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, condemned the move, calling it a “stark challenge to the entire international community.”

There was no immediate American reaction.

Israel announced plans early this month to build thousands of settlement homes, including in Ramat Shlomo, in response to the U.N. General Assembly‘s recognition of a Palestinian state in the West Bank, east Jerusalem and Gaza Strip, territories captured by Israel in the 1967 Mideast war. The U.S., Israel‘s closest ally, condemned the construction plans, and several European allies summoned Israeli ambassadors to lodge formal protests.

Israel strongly objected to the Palestinian’s U.N. bid, saying it was an attempt to bypass negotiations. Israel rejects a return to its 1967 lines.

Israel annexed east Jerusalem following the 1967 war and claims the area, home to sensitive Jewish, Christian and Muslim holy sites, as an inseparable part of its capital. The Palestinians also claim east Jerusalem as the capital of their hoped-for state. About 200,000 Jews and roughly 250,000 Palestinians live in east Jerusalem.

While Israelis consider its east Jerusalem enclaves to be neighborhoods like others in the city, the international does not recognize Israel‘s annexation of the area and rejects the sections as illegal or illegitimate settlements.

Abbas has refused to negotiate with Israel so long as settlement construction continues, leading to a four-year lull in talks. Abbas has said that a stalemate in talks urged him to turn to the U.N.

Support is growing for his political opponents, Gaza’s militant Islamic Hamas rulers, following eight days of fighting with Israel last month. Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh might defeat Abbas if an election were held today for the presidency, according to a poll published Monday by the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research.

The survey said Haniyeh would receive 48 percent of the Palestinian vote and 46 percent for Abbas, a virtual tie. Just three months ago, Abbas received the support of 51 percent and Haniyeh 40 percent.

The poll surveyed 1,270 Palestinians and had a margin of error of three percentage points.

Source: Fox World News

Thousands join Hamas marches in West Bank

Hamas has staged new rallies in the West Bank, one day after thousands of its activists turned out for the first marches there by the militant group there in five years.

Friday’s marches in several cities appeared larger than Thursday’s demonstrations, the first in the Palestinian territory since the 2007 split in which Hamas seized Gaza and the secular-leaning Fatah was left in control of the West Bank.

The rivals have been making overtures toward each other since last month, when Hamas fought an eight-day conflict with Israel and the West Bank‘s Western-backed president Mahmoud Abbas won U.N. recognition of a de facto Palestinian state.

Marchers chanted for Hamas to bomb Israel. Hamas’ leader in Gaza, Ismail Haniyeh, addressed crowds by phone — an unusual concession by Fatah.

Source: Fox World News

Israeli troops clash with Palestinian protesters

Dozens of Palestinian youths are clashing with Israeli soldiers in the West Bank city of Hebron, throwing stones and bottles at the troops. The Israeli forces have responded with tear gas. There are no immediate reports of serious injuries. Thursday’s clashes came a day after a Palestinian teenager was shot dead by Israeli forces in the city, near the Cave of the Patriarchs, a holy site revered by Jews and Muslims. Tensions have been heightened since Wednesday’s shooting. Israel‘s paramilitary border police force said it shot the 17-year-old after he brandished a gun that later turned out to be fake. But the Palestinians claimed the youth was unarmed, and had failed to heed orders to halt at a military checkpoint because he was hard of hearing.
Source: Fox World News

Abbas urges Arab aid for struggling Palestinians

The Palestinian president is urging Arab nations to provide major financial assistance to cover a new monthly $100 million budgetary shortfall after U.N. recognition of Palestinian claims to statehood — result of a punitive Israeli measure. Mahmoud Abbas told Arab League officials Sunday in Qatar that his Palestinian Authority in the West Bank is “collapsing” under financial strain. Abbas faces added pressures after rival Hamas in Gaza received major pledges of aid from Qatar‘s emir in October. Israel halted the tax transfer funds — customs duties collected on behalf of Palestinians — after last month’s U.N. vote to recognize a Palestinian state in territories captured by Israel in the 1967 Mideast war. Last week, Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad called on Arab countries to send $240 million a month.
Source: Fox World News

Hamas chief arrives in Gaza for first-ever visit

Hamas chief Khaled Mashaal has arrived in the Gaza Strip for his first-ever visit. The landmark trip reflects his militant group’s burgeoning international acceptance. Mashaal had left the West Bank as a child and currently leads the Islamic movement from Qatar. Mashaal crossed the Egyptian border on Friday and was greeted by Hamas officials and representatives of the rival Fatah party. He kissed the ground as Palestinian orphans — children of Gaza militants killed by Israel in recent years — rushed to greet him. Mashaal’s visit comes after he led the Hamas delegation that accepted a truce to stop last month’s eight-day conflict between Israel and Gaza. Gaza officials are portraying the landmark visit as a celebration of what they call Hamas’ victory in the recent fighting.
Source: Fox World News

Jordan king visits West Bank to support Palestinians

Jordan‘s King Abdullah II paid a rare visit to the West Bank on Thursday in a show of support for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas‘ successful bid for U.N. recognition of a Palestinian state.

Abbas and the king are political allies, and last met Sunday in Jordan, during one of the Palestinian leader’s frequent stops in the neighboring kingdom. But Thursday’s visit was just the third time the king has visited the West Bank, and the first time in more than a year.

The king received a red carpet welcome with military honors at Abbas’ government compound in the West Bank after landing in a helicopter Thursday morning.

Last week, the U.N. General Assembly recognized a state of Palestine in the West Bank, Gaza and east Jerusalem — lands Israel occupied in 1967 — as a non-member observer.

The king’s arrival gave a high-profile boost of support to the U.N. bid, which has come under fierce Israeli criticism. Jordan is one of just two Arab countries with a peace agreement with Israel, so Abdullah’s public support was significant.

Israel accuses the Palestinians of trying to circumvent the negotiating process by seeking U.N. recognition. Although the vote did not change the situation on the ground, the international community endorsed the Palestinian position on future borders with Israel. Israel refuses to return to its pre-1967 lines.

Israel has responded to the Palestinians’ U.N. move by cutting off a regularly scheduled $100 million tax transfer to the cash-strapped Palestinian Authority, and announced plans to build thousands of new settler homes in the West Bank and east Jerusalem.

The settlement plans have sparked widespread international criticism, and prompted the Palestinians to file a complaint at the United Nations. But Israel‘s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, has refused to back down.
Source: Fox US News

Jordan king visits West Bank in nod to Palestine

Jordan‘s King Abdullah II is showing support for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas‘ successful bid for U.N. recognition of a Palestinian state with a visit to the West Bank. Abbas and the king are political allies, and last met Sunday in Jordan, during one of Abbas’ frequent stops in the neighboring kingdom. The king received a red carpet welcome with military honors at Abbas’ government compound in the West Bank on Thursday after landing in a helicopter. Last week, the U.N. General Assembly recognized a state of Palestine in the West Bank, Gaza and east Jerusalem — lands Israel occupied in 1967 — as a non-member observer.
Source: Fox World News

Palestinians to UN: Stop 2 big Israeli settlements

A West Bank official says the Palestinians will ask the U.N. Security Council to halt two massive Israeli settlement projects that he warns will destroy last hopes for a Mideast peace deal. For now, Israel is advancing both projects, E-1 and Givat Hamatos, with some 7,500 apartments. The construction would cut off east Jerusalem, the intended Palestinian capital, from the West Bank. Israel revived plans for E-1 last week, after the U.N. recognized a state of Palestine in lands Israel occupied in 1967. Palestinian official Saeb Erekat said Wednesday the Palestinians are asking the Security Council to block construction because otherwise “the idea of peace … will disappear.” He says the U.S. must halt construction itself if it wants to avoid casting a veto at the council, as in 2011.
Source: Fox World News

Canada to continue aid to Palestinians

Canada will continue to provide millions of dollars in humanitarian aid to the Palestinians despite saying last week it would assess its whole relationship with the Palestinian Authority after the U.N. General Assembly voted to recognize the Palestinians as a non-member observer state Canada, a staunch ally of Israel, strongly opposed the Palestinians’ successful effort last week to win elevated status and was one of the few countries to vote against it. Foreign Minister John Baird recalled diplomats from Israel, the West Bank and the U.N. to assess the implications of the vote and get advice Tuesday. Rick Roth, a Baird spokesman, says Canada‘s current five-year, $300-million commitment in funding for security and humanitarian aid is important and will remain. Roth says as a matter of course they will “review the path forward” once the projects are completed. U.S. lawmakers have threatened to cut off aid if the Palestinians use their newfound status against Israel. Some suggested Canada could do the same.
Source: Fox World News

Palestinian war crimes case faces long road

Just days after winning upgraded status at the United Nations, the Palestinians are already threatening to join the world’s first permanent war crimes court and pursue charges against the Israelis. Although the Palestinians say that any decision is still a long ways off, the mere threat has unnerved Israel. But pressing a case may not be so simple and could potentially leave the Palestinians themselves vulnerable to prosecution. Since winning recognition as a nonmember observer state in the United Nations General Assembly last week, the Palestinians believe they now qualify for membership in the International Criminal Court. In opposing the Palestinian bid at the U.N., Israel repeatedly cited Palestinian threats to turn to the ICC to prosecute Israeli officials for a variety of alleged crimes, ranging from actions by the Israeli military to Israel‘s construction of Jewish settlements on occupied land. While Israel does not recognize the court’s jurisdiction and believes its actions do not violate international law, officials are concerned legal action that could embarrass Israel, make it difficult for Israeli officials to travel overseas or portray the country as a pariah state. A war crimes conviction can include fines and maximum penalties of life in prison. With this in mind, a senior Palestinian official, Nabil Shaath, spoke of possible ICC action over Israel‘s tough response to the U.N. bid. Israel immediately cut off $100 million in tax transfers to the Palestinians and announced plans to build thousands of new homes in West Bank settlements. “By continuing these war crimes of settlement activities on our lands and stealing our money, Israel is pushing and forcing us to go to the ICC,” Shaath said late Monday. On the surface, the Palestinians appear to have a strong case against Israeli settlements in the West Bank and east Jerusalem. The Palestinians claim the two areas, as well as the Gaza Strip, for their future state. The U.N. resolution last week recognized a Palestinian state in all three territories, captured by Israel in the 1967 war. Israel withdrew from Gaza in 2005 but continues to control access in and out of the area. The U.N. resolution appeared to repudiate the Israeli position that the West Bank and east Jerusalem are “disputed” territories and effectively condemned Israeli settlements in the areas, which are now home to some 500,000 Israelis. Settlements are at the heart of the current four-year deadlock in peace efforts, with the Palestinians refusing to negotiate while Israel continues to build more settler homes. The ICC‘s founding charter describes “the transfer, directly or indirectly, by the Occupying Power of parts of its own civilian population into the territory it occupies” as a war crime. The Palestinian position on settlements has widespread international support. The international community, even Israel‘s closest ally, the U.S., has broadly condemned the latest planned settlement construction. “Under our very clear understanding of international law, the settlements are illegal and have always been illegal, and that will remain so,” Andrew Standley, the European Union‘s ambassador to Israel, told reporters Tuesday. Even so, turning this international opposition into legal action against Israel will be no small task. The Palestinians would face a number of legal and political obstacles in pressing forward. For starters, it remains unclear whether the Palestinians qualify for membership in the court, because it is open only to states. Last April, the court’s chief prosecutor at the time, Luis Moreno-Ocampo, turned down a request by the Palestinians to join the court. But he subsequently said in an AP interview that they would qualify for membership if they gained nonmember state status at the U.N. So far, the court has said only that it “takes note” of last week’s U.N. decision and will consider its “legal implications.” Moreno-Ocampo is no longer at the court. Goran Sluiter, professor of international law at Amsterdam University, said that with their newfound status, it seems likely the Palestinians could join the ICC. But it is unclear whether the court would agree to investigate their complaints. He said the court would look at key issues, including the gravity of the alleged crimes and whether Israel‘s own judicial system is capable of judging the case, before deciding whether to prosecute. If they were to launch a probe, prosecutors also would look at alleged crimes by Palestinians. “I think there is still a very, very, very, long way to go,” Sluitter said. In the conflict between the Palestinians and Israel, “there’s a broad range of conduct that could be a basis for further investigations because they would qualify as war crimes.” Robbie Sabel, a former legal adviser to the Israeli Foreign Ministry, said he thinks the Palestinians “will seriously hesitate” taking action against Israel. He said Israel, for instance, could try to hold the Palestinian Authority responsible for rocket attacks out of the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip aimed at Israeli cities. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, who lost control of Gaza to Hamas five years ago, claims to represent both territories on the international stage. “Any Hamas person who launches a rocket could then be subject to ICC ruling. They have to expose their own people first,” said Sabel, who is now a law professor at the Hebrew University. A U.N. report into heavy fighting between Israel and Hamas four years ago found evidence of war crimes by both sides. Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor said Israel would fight any attempt by the Palestinians to use the ICC as a “politicized instrument” against Israel. “We are not worried about Israel‘s case because we have a good solid case and we work strictly according to international law,” he said. The Palestinians would also face heavy political pressure not to go to court. The U.S. Senate, for instance, is currently debating legislation that would cut off millions of dollars in assistance to the Palestinians and close their diplomatic offices in Washington if they file charges against Israel. The legislation is expected to be voted on in the coming days. A senior Palestinian official said the Palestinians are in “no hurry” to rush to the ICC, in part because they are pleased with the heavy international condemnations of Israel‘s latest settlement plans but also because of fears of antagonizing the U.S. The official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was discussing internal high-level deliberations, said the Palestinians are now focused on repairing ties with the U.S., which sided with Israel in opposing last week’s U.N. resolution. Yet he noted that the Palestinians have refused calls to promise not to go to the ICC. In a letter to the U.N. secretary-general on Monday, the Palestinian representative to the United Nations complained that “all Israeli settlement activities are illegal … and thus constitute a war crime.” Yet, reflecting the Palestinian thinking, the letter did not threaten to pursue the matter in the ICC. ___ Corder reported from The Hague, Netherlands. Amy Teibel and Lauren E. Bohn in Jerusalem contributed reporting.
Source: Fox World News  

UK downplays economic sanctions against Israel

British Foreign Secretary William Hague has downplayed the possibility of European economic sanctions against Israel for its latest settlement-building plans, saying there is “no enthusiasm around the European Union” for such measures. Asked in Parliament about whether Britain would put some economic muscle behind its condemnations of Israel, Hague said that imposing sanctions is not the U.K.’s approach. He added he does not believe “there would be anywhere near a consensus” on the issue in Europe. Hague said Tuesday that Britain will continue to try to bring both sides back into peace talks, and consider what further diplomatic steps European countries can take if Israeli settlement building continues. Israel on Monday rejected American and European condemnations over its plans to build thousands of new homes in West Bank settlements.
Source: Fox World News